1,100 Nigerians In Indian Jails –Envoy

No fewer than 1,100 Nigerians are currently serving various prison terms in India

The Indian High Commissioner in Nigeria, Amb. Ajjampur Ghanashyam, who stated this added that Nigeria and his country will soon sign Prisoners Transfer Agreement.

This, he added, will allow prisoners of the two countries to return to their home countries to serve their jail terms.

Ghanashyam, who dropped the hint during an interactive session on Sunday, stated: “When I came to Nigeria, there were about 1,800 Nigerians in our prisons and that was shocking for me and now I am told it is about 1,100.

“We are waiting for an agreement to be signed between India and Nigeria on transfer of sentenced persons.

“They need to be brought back and they can also be taken back to India before commencing their jail terms so that they can serve their sentences here.

“At this is at the moment, pending with the Nigerian government. I hope that we will be able to sign it”, he said.

The Indian envoy also said some Indians had been arrested as pirates, adding that the High Commission was engaging the Nigerian authorities to ensure that the innocent ones among them released.

“We still have some problems with piracy. There are ships operators who hire Indians to run the ships.

“The boys are not aware of that the ships are used for bunkering; they are paid to do a job on the ship.

“So they picked up the job and then land on the ship only for the Navy to come and pick them up and take them to jail.

“You must arrest the owner of the ship, maybe you should arrest the Captain of the ship but not these boys who have no knowledge of what the ship was doing,” he said.

Ghanashyam said Indians living in Nigeria were quite happy, adding: “I have not come across Indian who complains but occasionally there are some pockets of kidnappings”.

“But ultimately we have not seen any loss of lives to kidnapping and I believe the situation was much worse before.

“This is because I think the infrastructure of law enforcement in the country is now far better than what it was in the past in Nigeria,” he said.